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3 - Conrad, G. E. Moore and Idealism

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 September 2017

John Attridge
Affiliation:
Senior Research Fellow at the Royal United Service Institute, UK
Katherine Isobel Baxter
Affiliation:
Northumbria University, Newcastle
Robert Hampson
Affiliation:
Royal Holloway, University of London
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Summary

In this chapter, I want to compare certain aspects of Conrad's attitude to language with contemporary developments in English philosophy. In particular, I want to consider how far G. E. Moore's watershed 1903 essay ‘The Refutation of Idealism’ and Conrad's less technical but, on the whole, equally sceptical views on ‘idealism’ and ‘ideals’ can be seen to address similar problems and to express a common mood or structure of feeling. It is not my purpose here to argue that Conrad shared Moore's philosophical position with regard to Idealism, although I will suggest that the tension between such opposing terms as ‘abstract ideas’ and ‘material advantage’ in Conrad's work does bear some relation to the more properly metaphysical questions in Moore's essay. As well as this loose correspondence at the level of content, however, I want to suggest that Moore's modernist intervention in the discourse of philosophy and Conrad's modernist literary sensibility share meaningful affinities at the level of medium at the level, that is, of language. A large part of what made Moore's philosophy recognisably new was his rigorous analysis of the meaning of inherited philosophical terms and his own deployment of a novel philosophical idiom. Moore's rebellion against Idealism arguably the dominant philosophical school in Victorian Britain was a linguistic, as well as a substantive rebellion. Thus, I suggest below, Moore's sense that the Idealist vocabulary of Victorian philosophy produced confusion paralleled Conrad's scepticism about some of the misleadingly abstract ‘ideals’ that had regulated nineteenthcentury political discourse, as well as his desire to refurbish this faded vocabulary using the sensory concreteness of impressionist style.

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Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2016

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